Browsing Posts published by Kathy

Blessings of June 13

June 13, 2010

Laresa is 30 years old today. A great blessing came to Mickey and I when she was born. We know the power of blessings in her life. One of the best and most recent is the healing of the epithelial tissue around the Amplatzer Cribriform Occluder Titanium device, which was put in her heart December 15, 2009.

I am extremely grateful for my family, meaning especially my immediate family, Mickey, Heidi, Zachary, Kathleen, Isaac, Charlotte, Nicole, Ila, Laresa and Bethani. Beyond that comes gratitude for my birth family and my extended family, specifically my family by marriage. Today the births of my father and sister are on my mind. My youngest sister, Deanna Lynn Baggs, was born June 13, 1958. She died at the age of 20 on July 27, 1978. She would be 52 years old now. Dad, Deane Whitney Baggs, was born June 13, 1921. He would have been 89 years old today. He died 12 years ago on August 7, 1998. Deanna’s birth wouldn’t have happened without Mom. Rose Marie Barnes was born January 25, 1925 and died June 1, 1992. She would have been 85 years old now. I love them and miss them, but I know that they lived and died according to the will of my Heavenly Father and my life was blessed and will continue to be blessed because of them and their good works. We are bound to each other with eternal ties. The sealing power of the Priesthood and the covenants we all have made as well as our individual obedience will keep us together forever.

Sports Catastrophe

Well, now that’s quite a title.  I preferred non-contact sports like hiking, biking, tennis and skiing. I’ve had the normal case of a sore wrist from church volley ball or aching muscles in the spring that occur with the start of church softball, and thigh muscles waking up for a new ski season.

Fortunately, I’ve only been hurt once in a sport, and I wasn’t even playing!  My catastrophe happened one spring day in May 1972. I had been called as Young Women Sports Director in the Ogden 13th Ward. We made it through basketball during the winter and then softball season started in the spring. We practiced at Lorin Farr Elementary school. May 18, the girls and I met there. I carried the equipment bag and started toward the backstop. The girls had already taken one of the balls out of the bag and were playing catch as we walked. All of a sudden, I felt a terrible pain in my face and found myself on the ground. The girls were crowding around asking me if I was alright. One of them had thrown the ball to another one and it hit me on my right jaw. I thought I was alright and started to tell them while I was getting up, but as soon as I began talking I felt great pain on the right side of my face. I told them I was ok but we’d practice later or something like that. I picked up the equipment and walked slowly to my car.

I walked into the house and told Mom that I thought my jaw was broken. She knew right away and called the doctor and I was in the hospital soon after that. Mom had broken her jaw in a fall in her bedroom 4 years before. The doctor that fixed her up also worked on me. The next morning I had surgery to set the bone and wire my jaws shut. What fun to wake up to that and be vomiting from the anesthesia. In six weeks I could open my mouth again and start remembering how to chew.

Another time, in about 1981, I was running with Sammy, our malamute, at the Jr. High school track in Huntington. It was a rough track and all of a sudden Sammy decided she wanted to run in front of me, not at my side. Down I went, but only had a scraped knee. Sammy just sat there wondering why we weren’t running anymore.

A freak ski accident in 1969 or 1970, when I was 17,  left me uninjured, except maybe my pride. It was one of the few times I went skiing at Snow Basin without Dad. My friend, Susan asked me if I wanted to go with her, so I went. She drove and we started out early for a great day of skiing. We went right to the top, riding the lift up Wildcat and then skiing over to the lift to take us up to Porcupine, the top of Snow Basin at the time. About 1/3 of the way down Porki, I caught an edge and fell. No problem. I got up only to find that when I put my ski back on it was broken. Trying to ski on one ski just didn’t work. So I ended up carrying my skis and walking all the way back down. It was a long walk as I kept out of the way of the skiers zooming past me. I had plenty of time to think and try to figure out how to fix my ski somehow because the season wasn’t over yet. Of course, Susan didn’t want to stop skiing. Who could blame her when we’d just purchase our day passes less than an hour ago? I spent the rest of the day regretting my misfortune and wishing Dad was there. I was sure he could fix anything and that we’d still be skiing, if only Id’ gone with him, but he was at work.

Spare Time

  • Real reading, for fun, when you can just let the hours flow into each other and not have to check the time to make sure you stop to come back to reality.
  • Being outside, away from people
  • Driving
  • Listening to classical music
  • Playing the piano
  • Listening to Mickey & Zach play the guitar and sing
  • Looking at family pictures

Moving Out

My first time moving out was a temporary move from Ogden, Utah to Corvallis, Oregon in 1973. I went to live with my sister, Cherie, her husband, Eric, and their baby daughter, Kim. It was summer vacation for me from classes at Weber State, which had included a 6 week internship working at the Deaf School assisting the speech therapist. Kim had been born in March and when Cherie had to go back to work in June, our sister, Deanna, went to babysit her. My turn came in August. I moved with my clothes, scriptures and a couple of books all packed in Mom’s suitcase. I stayed with them for about 6 weeks, not what you would call really moving out, but it was my first extended stay away from home. Taking care of Kim and helping out with household chores was fun and a good experience for me.

Life quickly changed when I met my future husband, Mickey, at church. Although we were engaged four days later, the wedding didn’t take place for 8 months. The next year I really moved out of my parent’s home, way out, nearly 5 blocks away! Mickey and I had rented an apartment at 1180 #1, 24th Street, just below Harrison Boulevard in Ogden. We began moving a little bit before we were married. Mickey and his brother, Jay, stayed there before our wedding. After our wedding in the Salt Lake Temple and our reception in the Ogden 13th Ward, we drove to the Manti Temple, St. George Temple, which was closed, Los Angeles Temple and the Oakland Temple. We arrived in Corvallis, Oregon for an our Open House, returning to Ogden a a week after our marriage. It was nice having our own little apartment as our home.

First Apartment

Try to imagine entering the front door. You are in the living room, Keep going and you are in the kitchen. Another step and a half and you are in the bathroom.  One more step and you are in the bedroom. To furnish and decorate it, we used all of our combined possessions from our single days and our wedding gifts. We filled the kitchen cupboards with new dishes, glasses, bowls, pans etc. New colorful towels were in the bathroom. We’d taken from my parent’s home an old footstool and a rocking chair for the living room. My cedar chest and Mickey’s stereo complimented those. For the bedroom we had my chest of drawers and a small bookcase that had belonged to Mom. Our new bedding, was laid out neatly on the floor, where we slept , and our books, which were many, lined the space on the bedroom floor against the walls. When our next door neighbors moved, they gave us their kitchen table. It had a hole in the top, but we used one of our new table cloths to cover it up. Now we no longer sat on the floor with the footstool as our table during meals. We did have to scrounge up a couple of chairs, a brown one that might have been Grandma Baggs’ and a white one that was Grandma Barnes’.

Due to the galley style of this apartment, the only ventilation came from a little kitchen window and a bedroom window, which were both on the west side. On the east was the next apartment of this fourplex.  We lived in the upstairs apartment on the west side. When we came home from work it was nearly as warm as an oven. By July we were baked enough and found a basement apartment 2 blocks away.

 

Child Names

When we were expecting our children, we didn’t know the gender of the child until birth. As we anticipated and prepared, we thought of names and knew the final decision couldn’t be made until we saw our baby. Even so, each name was the right one for each baby. With our firstborn, we had a boy’s name and a girl’s name chosen; Benjamin and Heidi.

HEIDI

We liked the name, Heidi, because of Dad’s Swiss ancestry. It wasn’t a common name to us. We didn’t know anyone named Heidi, except the little girl in the book by that name. One meaning is “Noble One” another is “Battle Maiden”. I chose “Noble One”. Marie and Lynn were considered for middle names. Lynn has a better flow with Heidi and when our niece, Holly Marie, was born, we were glad we had chosen Lynn. Heidi now she shares her middle name with my sister, Deanna.

ZACHARY

This was a good strong name and we didn’t know anybody with that name. It means, “The Lord’s Remembrance”. We both really liked that. Deane is my father’s name and sounded good with Zachary. We asked Dad what he thought if we named our baby after him, if it was a boy; Zachary Deane or Deane Zachary. I think he said we didn’t need to include his name, but when we said we’d like to name our son after him, he said Zachary Deane would be better for the boy. If he was named Deane Zachary, he might be nicknamed Dizzy and Dad thought that wouldn’t be good. A side note: After he was born, Grandma Barnes wondered why we wanted to give our little baby an old man’s name.

LARESA

We started the idea with Laura or Lara, but didn’t want it mispronounced as Lora. We weren’t really happy with either of those. We had heard the name Larissa before but that wasn’t what we were looking for. Laresa was just right. Then Dad added Kathleen for a middle name, disregarding the single syllable middle names we had chosen for our other two children. It seemed too long to me, but he had his way. Later, I realized that Laresa and I are both third children who are named after their mothers. Just recently I learned from Mom’s journal that Dad surprised her when he blessed me, adding Rose as my middle name. Since it is derived from Laura, the meaning is cheerful.

BETHANI

We both liked the name Beth but it wasn’t what we wanted. Elizabeth was too long and was the name of one of Dad’s old girlfriends. Beth Ann didn’t quite work; but Bethani was just right. Adding Anne made it even prettier. We had never heard the name before and it made Dad think of the city of Bethany, where the Savior traveled on His last mortal journey.

Side note: Bishop Wood’s wife, Lauralee, asked us for dinner soon after she was born. When we got there, she wanted to see the baby and asked us her name. As soon as we told her, she said, “Oh how nice. That’s my grandmother’s name.”

By the way, after mostly deciding on the name of each of our babies before they were born, we didn’t ever have a favorite name for the other gender, except in the case of our first born.

I wanted to be a secretary. My sisters and I used to play office. When I was about 5 I wanted a real notebook, with lines, of my own. Mom gave me one and I proceeded to go to work and “wrote” in cursive. Later I wanted to be a teacher, probably because of Mrs. Wilson. She was my 2nd grade teacher in the 2nd/3rd grade split class. I was very happy to move to 3rd grade with her as my teacher again.

When I started babysitting, I only wanted to be a Mom who could stay home with my children. Besides tending for the Primary nursery after school, I babysat mostly for the Lynn and Louanne Livesey family. Their home became my second home. Louanne worked at the hospital and Lynn worked at HAFB. They had different shifts and I spent many days at their home, where I took care of David, Annette and Mark, and Steven, who was born a couple of years later. I also cooked—mostly macaroni and cheese, sandwiches and soup or heating up what Louanne had prepared for dinner–did the dishes, read stories, played, cleaned up, wiped noses, changed diapers, settled arguments. Because we lived so close, we could go for a walk across the street and down 5 houses to my house to visit with Mom and Rick and Deanna. David idolized Rick. At the end of the day, bedtime came, with all the settling down, reading stories and saying prayers. After they were  in bed, I read until I fell asleep on the couch until about 11:30 or later when they got home.  If Louanne and Lynn came home home together, Louanne would walk me home while Lynn stayed with the kids. If not, she would stand on her front porch and watch me, not going back into her house, until she saw that I had turned off our porch light. These late nights were during the summer.

During high school, Luanne picked me up at Ogden High School in their 1962 Chevrolet Impala; white with red leather interior. She drove to the main entrance of the hospital, not the parking lot, got out of the car, said goodbye to her children and me and then went to work at 3:15. I drove the children home and took care of them until Lynn got home about 5:00 or 6:00. It sure was fun to drive their car and sometimes I took the “long” way home. I was mortified when they confronted me about the mileage on the odometer. They were disappointed in me because they had really trusted me. I learned about their gas budget! I was quick to repent and gained perspective as they lovingly taught me. I realized I could have been in big trouble if something had happened to the car or the kids while I was enjoying my new-found freedom. They were very nice and forgave me and still let me tend their children who had become like my young brothers and sister. From then on, we went and straight home from the hospital.

Though that was enjoyable and a good experience for me, it reinforced my desire to stay home with my children and not have a career. I saw the sacrifice Luanne made and her love for her family, learning much from her organization. She was able to quit work as the children got older and we remained great friends.

In high school and early college, I thought the best thing to do when I grew up was to ski all year round. I guess I was just going to have enough money somehow so I could ski in the northern hemisphere in the winter and travel to South America to ski there in the summer. That didn’t quite work out, but it’s still possible! It was in High School that I saw my first Warren Miller ski film, which are famous to this day.

I took business classes in high school; learning typing, shorthand, and transcription. I also thought I would like being an Elementary School Teacher. I loved children and had some wonderful teachers. In College, I left Business classes behind and after the first two years of college, began focusing on Child Development classes. I loved everything about them. A great opportunity came when one of my professors suggested I look into the summer Speech Internship at the Ogden School for the Deaf. This school was just a few blocks from home. I was interviewed and offered a job in the six week summer speech therapy program. I worked with Dr. Gary Suttlemyer as his aide during June and July of 1973. We helped seven children from age 4-12 who had varying speech problems due to illness, loss of hearing or physical disabilities. I hoped to work with him again after that initial job, but life took a different direction when I became engaged to be married and needed full time work.

In October 1973 I was hired as a teacher aide in Miss Price’s 3rd grade class at Park Elementary School in Ogden. In February 1974, I was hired as a secretary/typist at Hill Field and worked for the Civil Engineering Department. After a lengthy career of 11 months, I retired in January 1975.  As soon as Heidi was born I began practicing what I learned from Child Development books and classes on her and our children, as well as the children I have cared for over the years. I have helped Mickey with typing, even though he is a better typist. I have used my shorthand skills once in awhile and have even been a substitute teacher in Huntington Elementary and some schools in Orem.

You could say, all my dreams came true: I have been a skier, teacher, secretary and best of all a Mother.

Children tend to grow out of their clothing, sometimes before you are ready to buy new sizes for them. Fortunately, their father wore out knees on his levis. Maybe I was tired of patching them, or he didn’t need them any more. Using the fabric from a pair of levis above and below the knee,  the back of the leg, back pockets and waist band, you can make overalls for smaller people. Find a pattern you like in the size you need or outline the shape of a favorite pair onto some paper. The legs can be cut for legs, a pocket can be used for the bib front. If you use both the inside and outside of the pocket, the bib can be used for a big pocket. The waistband is used to make the overall straps and waistband. Elastic can be sewn in a casing for the back of the waistband, if necessary. Use the waistband for overall straps. It already has a buttonhole in it so you only have to sewn one button to the bib front. The other strap can be sewn on to the bib front or you can make a buttonhole in the end of it and sewn on a button so both straps can be unfastened.

Heidi & Zachary Sep 1978, Hogle Zoo  Isaac's first day of school, 8.27.09  Heidi &  Zachary Cochran-Sep 1978 at Hogle Zoo

Yarn hair ribbons don’t slide out of hair as easily as regular ribbon does.

Elementary School

When I was in first or second grade, I loved coming home for lunch. It was 21/2 blocks away and my mother was there. I could fix my own jam sandwich, eat, visit, and play for 20 minutes, then off I would go, running so I wouldn’t be late. Then, the worst thing happened. The school opened a cafeteria. My sister was excited about it; not me. I wanted to go home to the familiar, not embark into the unknown and strange. It must have been about a year before I would venture into the cafeteria, with its lunch tickets, lines, trays and 3 course meals. We never knew ahead of time what would be served.  Some days would find me running home for those few minutes away from school; home for a homemade, folded in half, jam sandwich. Maybe two.

Memories are interesting. Sometimes you want something specific and can’t remember and other times they just come to you as you go about your day. Her parents named her Marie Rose Barnes but I know she was called Rose most of the time.

image

In a v-mail letter from Dad to her during the War, he calls her Rosalie and Kitten.

v-mail from Dad

Bishop Chidester called her “Roses”. She loved her husband, children and grandchildren. She was careful in her grooming and dress; always neat. House dresses were the normal attire and she wore them with tennis shoes and white anklet socks. Sundays and going out were times for nicer dresses and suits; she liked to wear shoes with heels.

She washed her 3 daughters’ hair and rolled it in curlers Saturday night to be ready for Sunday. I didn’t like my hair done and sometimes it was tangled. I probably cried or fussed when she combed it. sometimes Dad would comb the tangles from mine while she fixed my sisters’ hair. Her favorite color was blue.

She liked cats and dogs. She had a dog named  Pal when she was about eight years old. She was probably nine or ten when she had Mickey and Mindy, both black kitties; a teenager when she had Tiger, who was striped and Fluffy who was a white long-haired cat when she graduated from high school.

             Rose and her cats (1280x625)     2010-04-17 019     Rose & her cat, Tiger (767x1024)  Rose and her cat, Fluffy and her friend, Fern Peterson Fluffy

One memory is very clear except I can’t remember how old I was. I might have been about 5. We were in the back bedroom, which at the time was the width of the house and we three girls slept and played there. The linoleum was red and yellow. Mom was sitting on one of the wooden chairs that went with the little table and chair set. We were sorting and picking up toys; just the two of us. There was a little hole in the linoleum.

We used to play Jacks on the kitchen floor. She was good! We sat on the linoleum and bounced the ball and picked up the jacks starting with onesies and going all the way up to ten. She was very patient when I had to chase the ball because I bounced it on the jacks or didn’t catch it after the first bounce. We cut out paper dolls together; she helped with the tricky cuts because I was too impatient with the scissors.

I often had bad dreams; nightmares and would cry out in my sleep, wakening to her calling my name. She would sit on the bed and talk to me and help me calm down. As I got older I became more aware of letting others sleep and would turn on my lamp and read the Book of Mormon until I could go back to sleep. She would see my light and come to see if I was alright. Only after many years did I realize that she must have been awake because she couldn’t sleep and was probably in pain and sick.

She taught me to cross-stitch and other embroidery stitches when I was eight or nine. When I learned to crochet at age 11, she was not able to help me much so Grandma Barnes taught me. When she began to lose the feeling in her hands, she took up fabric embroidery painting and hoped that would help her hands. She crocheted edges on pillow cases, dresser scarves, handkerchiefs and other things. She embroidered those same items and even began knitting a blue sweater for Dad. We think she didn’t finish it because he was allergic to wool. I don’t remember seeing her knit, but I do remember the embroidering, crocheting, though not as much and sewing.

She liked to sew and had been sewing since she was a girl. She and her friend, Fern Peterson, made their high school baccalaureate dresses for graduation. Mom’s was a turquoise blue dress with a white collar. Her formal was a pale blue. I appreciate the description she put on the back of these pictures before she mailed them to Dad during the War. She made baby clothes, dresses, pajamas, aprons and even a white fur muff and mitten set for Cherie and I one Christmas. On year all the girls received aprons which had our names machine-embroidered on them. One Christmas we each received a pajama bag in the shape of a Panda-bear head. There is a picture of one our cousins holding one; I don’t know how many she made. It was fun to put our pajamas away in the pajama bag instead of our drawer each morning.

Rose & Fern in Baccalaureate dresses     Rose in graduation formal

made by Rose Baggs for Kathy Baggs about 1961                                                                            Back: Nancy, Jeannie, Kathy, Ricky, Cheryl --Front: Andy, Neta, Deanna, Christine, Sharon -- Nancy is holding one of the pajama Baggs Mom made

I believe the death of her older brother, Lloyd, at the age of seven, when she was only four may be the main reason her parents were very protective of her as a child. She wasn’t the healthiest child and that kept her indoors much of the time.  When they visited Milton, Utah, where her mother’s family lived, she could run around and play with her cousins outside.

2010-04-17 012  2010-04-17 015  2010-04-17 020 

Some favorite foods that I remember she liked: tapioca pudding, rice pudding, roast beef dinners, corn on the cob and chicken on the grill made by Dad, Farr’s banana nut ice cream. She made lemon meringue pie for Dad’s birthday and canned fruit every summer.

Dad always had clean and pressed shirts for work and church assignments. Mom made sure his National Guard and Army Reserve uniforms were ironed and ready for him. She was an example of support and patience while Dad served in many callings and was away from home for meetings and Scout outings.

When the grandchildren came along, there was one girl after another for the first four. She enjoyed buying dresses and slips for their birthdays and for Christmas. When her first grandson was born, he too received nice clothes for church, even a suit when he was three years old. When she could no longer do the shopping for her grandchildren’s birthdays and Christmas, she sent Dad. He once said that he just got what she told him to.

Neta and I were taking care of her when Dad went to the hospital for heart by-pass surgery in May 1992. She had been sick and we were afraid she was getting dehydrated. Neta was trying to reach her doctor by phone and couldn’t get the help we needed. We knew she was getting worse and were talking about what to do next, when from her bed we heard her say, “Could we say a prayer?” Of course we prayed. That was a lesson to me.

 

google search for Deane Baggs found this article: "Ogden Bridal Pairs in December Spotlight"
Deseret News, December 29, 1945 page 9:
Making their home in Ogden are Mr. & Mrs. Deane W. Baggs. They were married recently in the Salt Lake Temple.
The bride, the former Miss Rose Marie Barnes, is a daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Cleve Barnes of Ogden, and Mr. Baggs is a son of Mrs. Ethel B. Clark, also of Ogden.
A reception was held for the couple at the Twenty-first Ward. The bride wore a white satin and marquisette gown and a veil caught with seed pearls. Her bouquet was composed of red roses and white carnations. The couple were attended by Mr. & Mrs. Andrew C. Baggs.
Mrs. Clark, the mother of the bridegroom, entertained at a wedding dinner in Salt Lake City following the ceremony. Miss Fern Peterson and Miss Veda Miller were among those who entertained for the bride prior to her marriage.
Mr. Baggs was recently released from the air corps after serving for 33 months in the European theater of war.